108 /!y// . '. (,) N """ ,, '-f' ' "if ,t;. t , ,;;', "*1 ',,> " -1 -:Mp' *'* I /';' .. J 4 , II , . -. ;:.. ... Two of the world most beautiful voices. LucIano Pavarotti. . . P ASSIONE . . . favorite Neapolitan love songs. Kin- Te Kanawa. . . BLUE SKIES. . . styltsh Nelson Riddle arrange- ments of standards by Irving Berltn, Cole Porter and Jerome Kern. On Compact Discs IPs and Cassettes. WlVlJON New from London Records, at record stores everywhere. o 1985 London/PolyGram Records Inc CJ I ,.' ,{ - ;rf' ,. "/ r . ./ , .Þ ",\ . , Rent Mother Nature,,- , Lease A Sugar Maple Tree Or :/ A Sap Bucket For One Y ear ",JmøMlnRJrmllJnMfJJVlflll., A really different Christmas gift idea. First, we'll send each lucky friend, in time for II '1'1!118 Ch ristmas, a gift An nouncement Card from you - and a copy of an authentic 1890 I 11 1 Treasury Dept. Lease, hand personalized, and suitable for framing. Then, in Spring I h' '86, when all the sap has been gathered and processed, each tree tenant will receive at least 65 ounces of 100% pure Maple Syrup in decorated jugs-33 ounces guaranteed to Bucket Borrowers-even more if Mother Nature yields an abundant -. supply! We do all the work- your friends get progress reports and the delicious I rr_J.f .:. .,'" . natural syrup- you get all the raves! 100% satisfaction money back guarantee. ,:' ''' ' \. ::;.... I. J Tree Lease $29.00 or Bucket Lease $19.00 .),. \ . Send check plus $4.00 handling per gift to ;",: ..,,,,; .r NORTH COUNTRY CORP. Dept. NC 1028 '1]". , ,.t<.i 106 Appleton SI., Box 193, Cambridge, MA 02238 'i Include full name and address of gift recipient. VISA, M.C. & Amex Accepted with Expiration Date To order by phone call (617) 547-0657 NOVEMBER. 25, 1985 depend upon such physical aids as canes and SeeIng-Eye dogs. . . . One is impressed with the excellent scholarship record Ved has accomplished at school. In addition to his activities as a student, he has organized a student gov- ernment, of which he is president. . . . Ved has a bne personality, a high moral charac- ter. excellent judgment, and is exceedingly tolerant in his thinking It is indeed a privilege to be able to recommend Ved Mehta to the Committee of Admissions for consideration to be accepted as a student at Harvard University. I didn't like reading about myself and I remember wanting to correct cer- tain impressions that Dr. Leiby's letter gave, such as that I had organized our student government. But I naïvely thought that the letter alone might swing the authorities at Harvard in my favor. Dr. Leiby got only a polite response from Harvard, however. U n- deterred, I went to the lengths of filing a complicated application. Al- though I did not get a formal rejec- tion letter from the university, in the end I was forced to conclude that the Harvard admissions committee was like the Great Wall of China, and there was no way I could scale it. T IKE all officials of the Indian gov- L ernment, Daddyji had faced man- datory retirement at age fifty-five. (He was a deputy director general of health services.) Although he had been given a year's extension-something that the government granted to officials it regarded as "indispensable" -by the summer of 1951 he was out of a job. Since he and the family had to. leave his government accommodations, they moved in temporarily with some rela- tives, and Daddyji converted most of his modest government pension into ready cash, so that he could use the money to build a little house for the family. He had already bought a little plot of land in a refugee colony in New Delhi, with money that the gov- ernment had paid him in compensation for our house lost to Pakistan. (All refugees who had lost property in the Partition were given ten per cent of its value by the government.) Daddyji's total resources at his retirement were barely eighty thousand rupees, or six- teen thousand dollars, and in addition to having to build a house, as Sister Pom wrote to me, he still had to sup- port four dependent children: my brother Om, who was twenty and had just started a four-year marine-engi- neering course; my sister Usha, who was fourteen; my brother Ashok, who was seven; and, of course, me Sister Nimi, who was twenty-three and had